cheat-fork-echo/README.md
Chris Lane f46698b656 Performed a large refactoring
Performed an extensive refactoring on the entire application for the
sake of code-cleanliness.

- Refactored out of an ad-hoc Imperative paradigm into more of a
  functional/declarative paradigm. IMO, this makes the application
  signifcantly easier to understand.

- Moved away from `argparse` and into `docopt` for argument parsing

- Version bump to 2.0.0

- Performed extensive refactoring on the setup.py script. Script should
  install to the system more cleanly now.

- Made minor formatting changes to the --list flag output

- Updated the README

Squashed commit of the following:

commit e5681bd536aa0220cdeb7884cc248db55be408c9
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Sat Apr 26 23:30:21 2014 -0400

    Fixed many bugs

    Everything seems to work now, I think.

commit 764ec5950cee958eb1b8333ddfcb6bcd45c28429
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Sat Apr 26 21:51:31 2014 -0400

    Restructuring for the sake of setup.py

    Seem to finally have a working install script

commit 5a866c23857b77ec65070dd8023cd734f2b7c242
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Sat Apr 26 18:01:11 2014 -0400

    Nits

commit a79954ba5b33d992fa6a32abffb33b161d624e3d
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Sat Apr 26 17:53:03 2014 -0400

    Implemented search

commit b570a897e9a12c15affe1a72628deae31836dee2
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Sat Apr 26 17:11:27 2014 -0400

    Nits

commit 1a8d85b44457f1b2131b3e8475c5270b5d0899e3
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Sat Apr 26 17:02:22 2014 -0400

    Still refactoring across files

    Trying to make the program structure clearer

commit 34dffd6462e492e81ea558e2009a71051b7663c9
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Sat Apr 26 16:40:37 2014 -0400

    Breaking app into several files

    This is for the sake of code-cleanliness

commit 4825d678ff5f9817ccbf727ef71e5dea15ff2586
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Sat Apr 26 15:55:19 2014 -0400

    Got syntax highlighting working

commit c37d7a626d451bfca3d4a072eb9fed604085170f
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Sat Apr 26 15:29:22 2014 -0400

    Reduced verbosity of function names

commit 8e626045186b37dce2480f5af1994ddfa8db79b5
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Sat Apr 26 15:24:41 2014 -0400

    Refactored argument passing

    Fewer arguments now need to be passed throughout the app.

commit 807ba814650010b3dd1b59d27400b3fb4fcfede7
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Sat Apr 26 11:40:05 2014 -0400

    Working through the refactor

commit e34e6540d4f8cd727e98aac68289d515a02d5fe6
Author: Chris Lane <chris@chris-allen-lane.com>
Date:   Thu Apr 24 20:00:10 2014 -0400

    Got a basic end-to-end refactor working

    Have re-implemented just the most basic functionality in the "cheat2"
    file.
2014-04-26 23:39:19 -04:00

152 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown

cheat
=====
`cheat` allows you to create and view interactive cheatsheets on the
command-line. It was designed to help remind \*nix system administrators of
options for commands that they use frequently, but not frequently enough to
remember.
![The obligatory xkcd](http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/tar.png 'The obligatory xkcd')
`cheat` depends only on `python` and `pip`.
Examples
========
The next time you're forced to disarm a nuclear weapon without consulting
Google, you may run:
cheat tar
You will be presented with a cheatsheet resembling:
```text
# To extract an uncompressed archive:
tar -xvf /path/to/foo.tar
# To extract a .gz archive:
tar -xzvf /path/to/foo.tgz
# To create a .gz archive:
tar -czvf /path/to/foo.tgz /path/to/foo/
# To extract a .bz2 archive:
tar -xjvf /path/to/foo.tgz
# To create a .bz2 archive:
tar -cjvf /path/to/foo.tgz /path/to/foo/
```
To see what cheatsheets are availble, run `cheat -l`.
Note that, while `cheat` was designed primarily for *nix system administrators,
it is agnostic as to what content it stores. If you would like to use `cheat`
to store notes on your favorite cookie recipes, feel free.
Installing
==========
First install the required python dependencies with:
sudo pip install docopt pygments
Then, clone this repository, `cd` into it, and run:
sudo python setup.py install
Modifying Cheatsheets
=====================
The value of `cheat` is that it allows you to create your own cheatsheets - the
defaults are meant to serve only as a starting point, and can and should be
modified.
Cheatsheets are stored in the `~/.cheat/` directory, and are named on a
per-keyphrase basis. In other words, the content for the `tar` cheatsheet lives
in the `~/.cheat/tar` file. To add a cheatsheet for a `foo` command, you would
create file `~/.cheat/foo`, whereby that file contained the cheatsheet content.
Note that `cheat` supports "subcommands" simply by naming files appropriately.
Thus, if you wanted to create a cheatsheet not only (for example) for `git` but
also for `git commit`, you could do so be creating cheatsheet files of the
appropriate names (`git` and `git commit`).
After you've customized your cheatsheets, I urge you to track `~/.cheat/` along
with your [dotfiles][].
Advanced Features
=================
Setting a DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR
---------------------------
Personal cheatsheets are saved in the `~/.cheat` directory by default, but you
can specify a different default by exporting a `DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR` environment
variable:
```bash
export DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR=/path/to/my/cheats
```
Setting a CHEATPATH
-------------------
You can additionally instruct `cheat` to look for cheatsheets in other
directories by exporting a `CHEATPATH` environment variable:
export CHEATPATH=/path/to/my/cheats
You may, of course, append multiple directories to your `CHEATPATH`:
export CHEATPATH=$CHEATPATH:/path/to/more/cheats
You may view which directories are on your `CHEATPATH` with `cheat -d`.
Enabling Syntax Highlighting
----------------------------
`cheat` can apply syntax highlighting to your cheatsheets if so desired. To
enable this feature, set a `CHEATCOLORS` environment variable:
export CHEATCOLORS=true
Creating/Editing Cheatsheets
----------------------------
Provided that you have an `EDITOR` environment variable set, you may create new
cheatsheets via:
cheat -e foo
If the 'foo' cheatsheet already exists, it will be opened for editing.
By default, `cheat` will attempt to write new cheatsheets to `~/.cheat`, and
will create the `~/.cheat` directory if necessary. If it is unable to do so,
the new cheatsheet will be written to the default cheatsheet directory instead,
though this will likely require `sudo`.
Contributing
============
If you would like to contribute cheetsheets or program functionality, please
fork this repository, make your changes, and send me a pull request.
Related Projects
================
- [lucaswerkmeister/cheats][1]: An implementation of this concept in pure bash
that also allows not only for numerical indexing of subcomands but also
supports running commands interactively.
- [jahendrie/cheat][2]: A bash-only implementation that additionally allows for
cheatsheets to be created and `grep` searched from the command-line.
([jahendrie][] contributed key ideas to this project as well.)
- [`cheat` RubyGem][3]: A clever gem from 2006 that clearly had similar
motivations. It is unclear whether or not it is currently maintained.
[dotfiles]: http://dotfiles.github.io/
[jahendrie]: https://github.com/jahendrie
[1]: https://github.com/lucaswerkmeister/cheats
[2]: https://github.com/jahendrie/cheat
[3]: http://errtheblog.com/posts/21-cheat
[4]: https://github.com/chrisallenlane/cheat/pull/77